Tom Wesselmann, La Promesse du Bonheur - Villa Paloma

29.06.2018-06.01.2019

June 29, 2018 - January 6, 2019Free entrance

NMNM-Villa Paloma56, boulevard du Jardin Exotique

Curated by Chris Sharp, and with the scientific coordination of Cristiano Raimondi, the exhibition Tom Wesselmann La Promesse du Bonheur – from June 29th, 2018 to January 6th, 2019 on the three floors of Villa Paloma in Monaco – features twenty-five works, from paintings to sculptures to drawings, realised within thirty years, from 1963 to 1993.

Taking its title from Stendhal’s celebrated claim that, “La beauté n’est que la promesse du bonheur”, (Beauty is but the promise of happiness), this focused survey will be dedicated to a number of very specific aspects of Tom Wesselmann’s production. These aspects include Victorian and post-Victorian sexuality, questions of female agency, their relationship to postwar economic abundance, and of course, the relationship of beauty, as well as the erotic to anticipation.

Concentrating on the artist’s portrayal of woman, which has been known to draw fire for its purported objectification, this exhibition argues for a much more nuanced understanding of the Wesselmann’s rapport with the female subject. Indeed, with this survey, a certain sense of female agency will become apparent, which in itself is symptomatic of a crucial historical shift from Victorian repression to economic abundance associated with postwar American consumerism, as both described and quite literally embodied in Wesselmann’s work.

Long considered one of the key American Pop artists as well as one of its great formal innovators, Wesselmann’s specific critical contribution to the movement has been a source of debate for decades. This survey intends to clarify this debate, locating his prodigious and penetrating contribution in the taboo subject of sexuality, portrayals thereof, and its indissociable link to the boundless promise conveyed by the cultural, material and economic bounty of postwar American society.

The catalogue, published by Mousse, features essays by Chris Sharp and Sabrina Tarasoff.